How To Develop A Trading Brain

"Tradingpsychologie," is a book on trading psychology that was published in Germany in 2012 and was received with great enthusiasm. Many readers and reviewers commented that it was the best book on the subject that they had ever read or that it was the first which was of any real use.The book's author, Norman Welz, is a psychologist and journalist who developed a keen interest in the stock market and the associated psychology. His specialty is trading psychology, a subject on which he has not only extensive experience but also some unique insights. Among other things, he trains traders to develop their brains in the right direction.

Welz stresses that what differentiates both his work and his book from the vast literature in the field is the emphasis on applied trading psychology. It is common knowledge that traders need discipline, but accepting this idea is simply not enough to enable investors to operate in the appropriate manner.

The essence of the problem is that most people like and need security in all its forms, but "trading is the most insecure business you can be in," Welz says. He argues that no other profession creates so many and such intense emotions and reflects so much of our personalities. He goes so far as to state that stock market activities personify money: "we don't just trade assets and money, we become the money," according to Welz.

To trade effectively, the right mindset is essential. Yet, nothing is harder than divorcing ourselves from the multitude of factors that have created our mindsets in the first place and that dictate how our brains function. We are influenced by parents, family, friends, the environment, society, the media, books and more. By the time we start trading, all of these influences tend to fix trading patterns that are often dysfunctional or suboptimal. Trying to change these patterns is somewhere between difficult and frightening.

It Is Truly All in the MindIn order to understand Welz's approach, it is necessary to understand the pervasive role of psychology and the brain. While the notion that psychology is vital to the stock market is nothing new, Welz believes that trading is literally 100% psychology. Without a psyche, we could never evaluate financial risk or recognize trends. "No brain, no stock market trading," says Welz. Mental strength is thus absolutely fundamental to trading success. Furthermore, about 95% of our actions are subconscious, and we tend to replicate our behaviors over and over again. All too often, this replication means repeating the wrong or even disastrous courses of action.

To support this contention, Welz refers to a study in which 120 traders were given a system that had proved its intrinsic value statistically in 19 of the last 20 years. After a test year, it was evident that 119 of these traders failed with the system because their mental tendencies led them astray. All but one trader had the wrong mental processes. "Success comes from the head," Welz says. The system was good, but the attitudes and psychology with which the traders applied that system were not.

Why Do Traders Neglect Psychology?Most traders are men, who tend to think that psychology is not what really matters. They think that what matters, rather, are simplistic notions of being coldly rational, well informed and experienced. According to Welz, however, rationality, information and experience don't help if the brain is not appropriately programmed and tuned. So what can we do to get our minds and subconscious to act appropriately?

Welz's Approach Norman Welz works on the brains of traders through the subconscious and hypnosis. Trainees are put into a trusting mood and the necessary competences are anchored in subconscious regions of the brain. If this process sounds a bit weird, consider this: For many years, Welz has helped people overcome their fears and blockages, enabling them to win sporting championships and even to secure an Olympic victory. Furthermore, he has helped traders to earn money through activating the right mental energy, motivation and, thus, behavior. He stresses that each person has unique mental bridges and barriers that need to be crossed or overcome in order to ensure success.

"Trading discipline" comes from modifying one's behavior in a desired direction and overcoming the mental resistance and fear that generally get in the way. Particularly in the context of trading, Welz believes that "there are armies of resistance." The trading brain in fact entails an integration of the right investment and market knowledge with the right mental capabilities. It is not that the usual skills are unimportant, it is just that they usually get overridden by the wrong mental and behavioral patterns.

Effective trading thus involves personality modification. According to Welz, "people who are not willing to attempt this should not even bother with trading." Those who concentrate only on the so-called logical aspects of charts and trends, including all those patterns like "flags, triangles and channels or stops and trading ranges," will ultimately flounder on the myriad of emotions that inevitably come into play and even dominate the markets.

The above, explains Welz, is "the ultra-short version" of his theory, but indeed the essence of the matter. Furthermore, he believes that anyone can become a trader and overcome his or her fears. Provided that people are not clinically ill, they can resolve those fundamental anxieties if they are truly willing to work on themselves. In addition, they need a good sense of and grip on reality if success is to result. Of course, financial knowledge and skills, information and research all still play key roles.

However, it is hard work getting there. Welz believes that people shouldn't think they can "start with a mini-account and live from their earnings as a professional trader within six months." It takes time and dedication. Welz believes that if this weren't the case, the roads would be full of Ferraris and Porsches.

The Bottom LineThe fundamental role of trader psychology tends to be underestimated and too much emphasis placed on the technical side. While both are essential, it is arguably the right mindset that differentiates successful from unsuccessful traders. However, learning the technical aspects of trading is more straightforward than acquiring a top-notch trading brain. The latter generally entails working intensely on one's own personality traits and eradicating entrenched behavioral patterns. This process is not easy and requires dedication, time, and often, the aid of a skilled coach. Nevertheless, the results are very likely to reap dividends.